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  • Todd H. Weir, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, The Netherlands
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
November 2023
Print publication year:
2023
Online ISBN:
9781316443736

Book description

Red Secularism is the first substantive investigation into one of the key sources of radicalism in modern German, the subculture that arose at the intersection of secularism and socialism in the late nineteenth-century. It explores the organizations that promoted their humanistic-monistic worldview through popular science and asks how this worldview shaped the biographies of ambitious self-educated workers and early feminists. Todd H. Weir shows how generations of secularist intellectuals staked out leading positions in the Social Democratic Party, but often lost them due to their penchant for dissent. Moving between local and national developments, this book examines the crucial role of red secularism in the political struggles over religion that rocked Germany and fed into the National Socialist dictatorship of 1933. This title is part of the Flip it Open Programme and may also be available Open Access. Check our website Cambridge Core for details.

Reviews

‘In a work of remarkable ambition and scope, Weir explores the complex relationship between socialism and secularism at a time when many workers retained ties to organized religion. Exposing the rifts within the German socialist movement over whether to pursue a radical secularist agenda, Weir’s meticulous scholarship will be indispensable for all future scholars probing this relationship.’

Mark Edward Ruff - author of The Battle for the Catholic Past in Germany, 1945–1980

‘Red Secularism offers a panoramic history of the evolving relationship between socialism and secularism situated in one of the most complex sites and periods in modern European history: Germany between 1890 and 1933. Out of this dense, thorny context, Weir tells a story that allows the reader to put the historical concepts and actors in conversation. Red Secularism will be of great value not just for historians, but for anyone interested in religious-secular-political conflicts and their manifestations in contemporary life.’

Victoria Smolkin - author of A Sacred Space Is Never Empty: A History of Soviet Atheism

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